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Rhapsody will be a server OS only

Apple Computer said today that its next-generation operating system,
code-named Rhapsody, will be offered only as a server OS, not as a client
OS likes its Mac OS. Rhapsody was originally developed to replace the
Mac OS but Apple has decided to change plans in mid-stride since it has
been able to successfully update the Mac OS beyond expectations.

Adobe Systems, makers of PageMaker and other leading Macintosh software,
for example, were originally approached by Apple to create Rhapsody
products as well. Since that time, about a year ago, the message from Apple
has changed dramatically: In addition to meetings with Apple about the
fate of Rhapsody, "Customers aren't asking for Rhapsody right now,"
according to an Adobe spokesperson.

The real problem may be a lack of interest from software developers. While
many developers have stuck by the Mac during an incredible drop in
marketshare, they aren't that excited about learning a new system that is
destined to have minimal marketshare as well.

"I think Apple is not getting the keen endorsement they thought they would
get, so without that endorsement, at least privately, it's hard to justify
\[Rhapsody replacing the Mac OS\]," said Chris Le Tocq, of Dataquest.

Interestingly, Apple denies that Rhapsody was ever intended to replace the
Mac OS, despite public declarations to the contrary last year. Then CEO
Gil Amelio said, "We are going to be building our next-generation OS on
\[Rhapsody\] technology."

"We've been trying to recalibrate those expectations ever since," said an
Apple spokesperson. "The Mac OS will be the volume OS from Apple for years
and years to come, probably forever." The spokesperson compared Rhapsody
to Windows NT. "You didn't see tons of apps for NT initially. I think
initially it will be in the server area and power applications space."

That's a believable scenario, but if Apple really believed that Rhapsody
would never replace the aging Mac OS, why did it spend over $400 million
buying NeXT, which made Rhapsody's predecessors, OpenStep and NeXTStep.
The company expected to get a replacement for the Mac OS, not a server OS,
which will likely never sell very well. Apple sells millions of copies of
the Mac OS a year, in contrast. Perhaps Apple will eventually sell a
version of Rhapsody for home computer users as well.

"If you're asking us if five to 10 years down the line, will there be one
OS, we're moving forward and not ruling that out," said the spokesperson.
"Over time, it may make sense to converge the two."

It sounds like Microsoft's plans for Windows NT. It also sounds like a
great idea